Now days grow longer
The dark diminishes, but
We hope for winter
Pink puffs against blue
Golden sky behind mountains
The morning arrives
Now days grow longer
The dark diminishes, but
We hope for winter
Pink puffs against blue
Golden sky behind mountains
The morning arrives
Sun rise through the fog
Eerie yellow against gray
Illumination
Sometime in her 20s, my mother developed a serious anxiety disorder. In the late 40s and early 50s, this was often called a nervous breakdown. Although the acute anxiety subsided, an underlying level of anxiety remained. One of advice that my mother received was to combat her anxiety through coloring. I remember my mother coloring especially when she was dying of cancer faster and faster and not always between the lines.
More than 25 years ago, the we had a hard time finding good coloring books for my mother. Now they’re everywhere and you can even download them from the Internet. I think she would have loved the ones I have now.
Like my mother I’ve had breast cancer. I’m lucky in that I have no evidence of recurrence, but still, I experience anxiety. I’ve always been anxious, with or without cancer, although it’s generally well managed. Arts and crafts are essential to manage my anxiety and so I have a collection of coloring books. And I have very fancy crayons, water soluble wax putting Crayola to shame with their intensity. I have other pencils and watercolors besides. Spoiled for choice.
The coloring books I like best have big areas between the lines. I find that small intricate designs annoy me and I have a difficult time staying between the lines. I guess that it doesn’t matter so much if I choose not to stay between the lines. I like the watercolor option best when I am able to color large sweeps of the area at once and sometimes I hold a crayon or a pencil so tight that my hand cramps (my inability to hold a pencil “normally” is another issue. And I get tired of coloring in a picture because it is so intricate. So I have lots of unfinished pages.
I’m trying to find ways to make coloring a more meditative process. I wonder that I’m making too much effort to color. I don’t have to finish each and every picture, use realistic colors or even stay between the lines. Color as much as I want and then let it go. I’m under no obligation to follow the rules of coloring per se, whatever those rules are. And yet, I feel myself trying to follow these rules subconsciously. I’ve been too judgmental of my efforts. And I could say, maybe it’s not a meditative process for me…..on the other hand, it helps me understand my own barriers.
Interesting, isn’t it? Sort of defies being in the moment, and yet, helps me understand what it takes to be in the moment.
Ribbons of clouds, shades
of gray to white. Patches of blue
poke through here and there.
Exploding green, bright
Fresh, full of life, reaching for
sun, always growing.
Young leaves, bright green, fresh.
Poking up from beneath earth
Time to bloom and sun.
It’s been a long time – so here’s a weather inspired haiku
Gray wet blanket looms
Endless monochromatic soup
Icy fingers grip.
Sky darkens, it rains.
Now there’s sun for a while, clouds
Rain cycle again.
Linoleum floors
Footsteps echo, fluorescent lights
Same old hospital
Another week, more
Travel. Laundry, pack and fly.
Fun, friends, family.